Chattanooga Times Free Press

60,000 march to celebrate Poland’s independen­ce

- BY VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — Tens of thousands of nationalis­ts marched in a demonstrat­ion organized by far-right groups in Warsaw Saturday, as Poles celebrated their country’s Independen­ce Day.

The far-right march was one of many events marking Poland’s rebirth as a nation in 1918 after being wiped off the map for 123 years. Earlier in the day, President Andrzej Duda presided over state ceremonies also attended by European Union President Donald Tusk, a former Polish prime minister.

But the march has become the largest Independen­ce Day event in recent years, overshadow­ing official state observance­s and other patriotic events. Some participan­ts expressed sympathy for xenophobic or white supremacis­t ideas, with one banner reading, “White Europe of brotherly nations.”

Participan­ts marched under the slogan “We Want God,” words from an old Polish religious song that President Donald Trump quoted from during a visit to Warsaw earlier this year. Speakers spoke of standing against liberals and defending Christian values.

Many carried the national white-and-red flag as others set off flares and firecracke­rs, filling the air with red smoke. Some also carried banners depicting a falanga, a far-right symbol dating to the 1930s.

Police estimated 60,000 people took part, and said there were no reports of violence. Many were young men, some with their faces covered or with beer bottles in hand, but families and older Poles also participat­ed.

The march has become one of the largest such demonstrat­ions in Europe, and on Saturday it drew farright leaders from elsewhere in Europe, including Tommy Robinson from Britain and Roberto Fiore from Italy.

State broadcaste­r TVP, which reflects the conservati­ve government’s line, called it a “great march of patriots,” and in its broadcasts described the event as one that drew mostly regular Poles expressing their love of Polands, not extremists.

A smaller counter-protest by an anti-fascist movement also took place. Organizers kept the two groups apart to prevent violence.

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